Stroke: Vascular and Interventional Neurology (Mar 2023)

Abstract Number ‐ 203: #BEFASTChallenge: Social Media Dance Campaign for Stroke Symptoms Awareness

  • Aaron J Fils,
  • Sushanth Aroor,
  • Pankajavalli Ramakrishnan,
  • Selina Ancheta,
  • Anita Tipirneni,
  • Mohammad El‐Ghanem,
  • Fawaz Al‐Mufti,
  • Nirali Vora,
  • Lisa Lamb,
  • Jennifer Potter‐Vig,
  • Mecker Moller,
  • Dileep Yavagal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/SVIN.03.suppl_1.203
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. S1

Abstract

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Introduction Public stroke education campaigns have traditionally utilized mass media. We hypothesized that a worldwide stroke awareness social media campaign, utilizing dance videos to express the BE‐FAST acronym for stroke signs and symptoms, could reach a large audience at a low cost. Methods Mission Thrombectomy 2020+ officially launched the #BEFASTChallenge, a Social Media (SoMe) public stroke educational campaign, on May 15, 2022, World Stroke Thrombectomy Day, after an internal “lead‐in” phase starting the first week of May 2022. The campaign was volunteer designed and implemented. The public and their followers were encouraged to post a video of their dance depicting each letter of BE‐FAST, tag the post with #BEFASTChallenge, and nominate others to participate. We tracked the SoMe posts from May 4th through July 13, 2022, on Facebook (FB), Twitter (TW), and Instagram (IG) platforms by searching #BEFASTChallenge on each SoMe site. We ascertained campaign adoption, public reach, and interaction by measuring original posts, views, likes, retweets, shares, and comments. Results There were 4 countries represented in the original posts on SoMe with the vast majority being from the US. The first post was on May 4, and the last was on July 13 (71 days), resulting in a daily average of 0.55 posts. The largest number of posts occurred on the launch date (16 posts). There were 39 original posts, which accumulated 170 retweets, 44 quote tweets, 755 likes, 32 comments, and 14 shares. The videos had 13,821views (Table 1). Conclusions We report that the preliminary analysis of a volunteer‐driven SoMe public stroke campaign utilizing dance to express stroke symptoms demonstrates feasibility, reaching a modest audience directly with good interaction. A similar professionally implemented SoMe campaign could lead to increased and more sustained user engagement to raise public stroke symptom awareness.